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Review Article |

Adolescent Bone Health FREE

Keith J. Loud, MDCM, MSc; Catherine M. Gordon, MD, MSc
[+] Author Affiliations

Author Affiliations: Divisions of Adolescent Medicine and Sports Medicine, Children's Hospital Medical Center of Akron, Akron, Ohio (Dr Loud); and Divisions of Adolescent Medicine and Endocrinology, Children's Hospital Boston, Boston, Mass (Dr Gordon).


Copyright 2006 American Medical Association. All Rights Reserved. Applicable FARS/DFARS Restrictions Apply to Government Use.

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Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med. 2006;160(10):1026-1032. doi:10.1001/archpedi.160.10.1026
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Pediatric and adolescent care professionals have increasingly recognized the importance of understanding the skeletal health of their patients. Peak bone mass, the “bone bank” on which an individual will draw for their entire adult life, is likely achieved by late adolescence, with the critical window for accumulation occurring much earlier. This review outlines the known conditions that are associated with impaired bone mineral accrual and clinical settings in which the evaluation of “at-risk” adolescents should be considered. We describe the methods available to the health care professional for evaluating bone density, along with the limitations of each technology. Potential therapeutic options for patients identified to have a low bone mineral density are discussed. Finally, current recommendations regarding physical activity and nutrition, beneficial interventions for all adolescents, are presented.

Figures in this Article

Peak bone mass (PBM) is one of the most significant predictors of postmenopausal osteoporosis1 - 2 and is likely achieved early in the third decade of life.3 - 4 At least 26% of adult total bone mineral is acquired during the 4-year period surrounding peak height velocity,5 - 6 with up to 60% acquired during the remaining peripubertal years.7 - 8 Addressing modifiable risk factors (Figure 1) that may predispose to a low bone mass during this critical window for bone accrual could therefore prevent future osteoporosis,10 a major national public health goal.

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Figure 1.

Factors affecting bone health. Reprinted with permission.9

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Physical Activity

It has long been observed that immobilized and other non–weight-bearing individuals (eg, astronauts) rapidly lose bone mass, suggesting the importance of skeletal loading for bone health.11 Classic studies in animal models have demonstrated that bone mineral acquisition requires forces that vary in intensity and are dynamic.12 Two recent comprehensive literature reviews by expert panels in which both retrospective and prospective studies were evaluated concluded that adult bone mass is positively correlated with childhood activity and that most clinical trials of exercise interventions confirm a positive association between activity and the bone health of children, adolescents, and adults.13 - 14 The benefits are noted to be “site specific,” meaning that the response of the skeleton varies depending on the type of exercise studied (eg, weight bearing),15 and may also be modified by nutritional factors.16

Nutrition

Interest and controversy surround the effects of nutritional factors on bone density and bone accretion during adolescence.16 - 17 Within a healthy weight range, there is a direct, positive relationship between body mass index (calculated as weight in kilograms divided by height in meters squared) and bone mineral density (BMD).18 Recent studies have demonstrated that overweight children have an increased incidence of fractures, suggesting a deleterious effect of excess adiposity on skeletal development and resilience.16 ,19 At the other end of the spectrum, illnesses that are characterized by weight loss, such as anorexia nervosa, illustrate the detrimental effect of malnutrition on bone density in teenagers.20 - 23 Questions have arisen regarding the applicability of findings from such studies of malnourished youth with chronic disease to the bone health of well adolescents. In particular, the skeletal effects of calcium and vitamin D in all children and adolescents is an issue that has received attention in many recent reports, including a position statement by the American Academy of Pediatrics.16 ,24 - 30

The effect of calcium intake during adolescence is one of the most intensely studied areas of pediatric bone health. Calcium is needed for normal mineralization of the bone and cartilage matrix. Once calcium intake is adequate to prevent rickets (disordered organization of the cartilage matrix) or osteomalacia (defective bone mineralization), provision of additional calcium may increase bone density by affecting bone turnover and the size of the remodeling space.30 - 31 Controversy arises because some, but not all, studies of calcium intake and measures of bone health show a positive relationship.24 However, because adolescence is the most critical period for bone mineral accrual, experts currently advocate for the provision of optimal calcium intake to maximize peak bone mass.16 - 17 These recommendations are driven by the fact that calcium absorption is known to be enhanced during puberty,6 ,32 - 33 with an optimal calcium balance achieved at an intake of approximately 1300 mg/d.34 Few data are available regarding the appropriate intake level for racial groups other than white adolescents.16 One study showed that compared with white adolescent girls, black teenagers exhibit more efficient calcium absorption and may achieve the same PBM with less calcium intake.35 Because of the potential skeletal benefits of calcium, it is concerning that the majority of adolescents fail to achieve the recommended daily intake.16 ,36

Several research papers and policy statements have also examined the role of vitamin D, which is needed for efficient bodily absorption of calcium, on the bone health of children and adolescents. Vitamin D deficiency has been linked to fracture and a low bone mass in elderly men and women.37 - 41 Recent research has documented vitamin D deficiency to be a common problem among otherwise healthy young patients, including adolescents,27 - 29 but have not definitively correlated this deficiency with decreased bone density in youth, often because of the lack of BMD measurements in some studies.

Hormonal Status

A number of hormones affect bone formation and remodeling. Endogenous circulating estrogens and androgens exert independently positive effects on bone growth, development, and mineral acquisition among both male and female adolescents.42 - 43 Patients with hormonal deficiencies or receptor abnormalities demonstrate lower than expected BMD.18 Similarly, growth hormone deficiency negatively impacts bone size and mass.18 Other endocrinopathies (Figure 2) affect the bone remodeling cycle by influencing osteoclasts and osteoblasts directly (eg, thyroid or parathyroid hormone, cortisol) or indirectly via their effects on the sex steroids (eg, hyperprolactinemia, hypopituitarism). Finally, ongoing studies are investigating the role of leptin as a primary or secondary messenger that modulates bone remodeling.46

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Figure 2.

Clinical settings that potentially confer skeletal “risk” to adolescents. *Indicates that an official position statement has been published (cystic fibrosis44 ; female athlete triad45 ).

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General Health and Genetics

In addition to exercise, proper nutrition, and maintaining a normal hormonal milieu, avoidance of excessive alcohol and any tobacco use is beneficial to bone health.18 The vast majority, between 60% and 80%, of the variance in PBM can be attributed to inherited and, likely, polygenetic factors,47 including putative, but unproven, receptor polymorphisms for vitamin D, estrogen, type I collagen, insulin-like growth factor I, transforming growth factor-β, and IL-6.18

Important conditions that are currently believed to place adolescents at risk for poor skeletal health—other than intrinsic bone diseases such as osteogenesis imperfecta—are listed in Figure 2. Some diseases (such as cystic fibrosis and inflammatory bowel disease) are associated with increased secretion of proinflammatory cytokines such as IL-1β, tumor necrosis factor α, and IL-6 that may directly inflict harm to the skeleton by increasing bone resorption.48 - 49 Many of these illnesses also require use of medications with deleterious skeletal effects (Figure 2). Finally, any condition that negatively affects the factors described previously (Figure 1) could impair bone mineral accrual.

Although the concept of “athletic amenorrhea” and its detrimental skeletal effects had been described earlier,50 - 51 it was not until 1992 that the term female athlete triad was coined (definition in Figure 2).45 Estimates of the prevalence of the triad have varied dramatically depending on the population studied18 ; it may remain elusive until, as some experts have recommended, the skeletal component “osteoporosis” is redefined to allow for a more meaningful assessment in young athletes.52 While the earlier term implicated the stress of exercise to be the cause of menstrual irregularity and a consequent hypoestrogenic state, more recent work has demonstrated that even subtle imbalances between caloric intake and energy expenditure alter luteinizing hormone pulsatility and amplitude, triggering the cascade that results in luteal phase defects or frank hypothalamic amenorrhea.53 Those who exhibit the female athlete triad may be at increased risk for stress fracture,54 but it is yet to be determined if this injury is a sentinel event for low BMD, warranting further evaluation.

Measures of BMD

Bone mineral density has been the most commonly used outcome measure to address skeletal status because bone mass predicts 80% to 90% of its strength in vitro,11 which translates into a high predictive value for osteoporotic fractures in postmenopausal women.55 - 56 Among children and adolescents, the association is not as strong, although the majority of case-control studies of healthy children suggest that the BMD z score (number of standard deviations higher or lower than the mean of peers matched for age, sex, and ethnicity) is predictive of fractures of the distal forearm (the most common fracture site during the pubertal growth spurt), with each standard deviation decrease from the mean significantly associated with an increased risk.56 The relationship is less clear among children and adolescents with chronic illness.56

Dual-Energy X-ray Absorptiometry (DXA)

Dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry (DXA) is the current standard for assessing BMD in children and adolescents. The scans are relatively rapid to perform and involve low radiation exposure. Because of their use in screening postmenopausal women, DXA scanners are often geographically accessible to pediatric professionals and demonstrate high precision. Pediatric software algorithms and reference data are increasingly available, allowing for BMD evaluations in young patients from early childhood up through adolescence.57 - 58 Using x-ray beams at 2 photon energies to differentiate soft tissue from bone, DXA can measure bone mineral content (in grams) and areal BMD—a 2-dimensional measurement of bone mineral per unit of area (grams divided by centimeters squared)—and estimate total body lean vs fat mass.

There are several caveats that arise as DXA is used in adolescents. A pediatric normative database must be used to interpret properly the measurement for either bone mineral content or BMD. The normative data must have been generated on a similar instrument58 - 59 and should account for sex58 and ethnicity,60 - 61 as each can influence bone mass. Since the z score is based on chronologic age, “correcting” the BMD for an adolescent with a delayed bone age (interpreting for that age) can be a helpful maneuver to avoid the overestimation of skeletal deficits.17 ,62 Even with appropriately matched databases and age adjustment, DXA does not adequately account for the influence of bone shape and size on its measurements.17 ,63 - 65 In essence, DXA estimates bone mineral content by measuring the “shadow” cast by bone within a fan-shaped x-ray beam. This shadow is influenced not only by the composition of the bone, but its depth, which is not measured, and the distance of the bone from the beam.63 ,66 Attempts to correct for these limitations include obtaining 2 orthogonal scans (ie, anteroposterior and lateral), mathematical formulas to estimate volumetric BMD (eg, bone mineral apparent density),67 - 68 and more advanced regression models,69 - 70 none of which have been adopted uniformly. The bones of an adolescent are also changing continuously because of growth, which only further complicates the BMD interpretation.

In recognition of these challenges, a 2004 position statement of the International Society for Clinical Densitometry issued guidance for the use of DXA in the diagnosis of osteoporosis in children56 (Table 1). Perhaps the most pertinent recommendation was that T scores, which compare bone density to PBM (assumed to occur between ages 20-29 years) and which are the basis of the World Health Organization definition of postmenopausal osteoporosis, should not appear in DXA reports for children and adolescents. Therefore, the diagnosis of osteoporosis in children requires evidence of skeletal fragility; it should not be made based on DXA measurements alone.56

Table Grahic Jump LocationTable 1. Guidance on Dual-Energy X-ray Absorptiometry Interpretation in Children and Adolescents Younger Than 20 Years*
Quantitative Computed Tomography

The current “gold standard” for noninvasive bone evaluation is quantitative computed tomography (QCT), which can evaluate bone in 3 dimensions, thereby providing a direct measure of “true” volumetric BMD (in grams per centimeters cubed).71 Differentiating cortical from trabecular bone, QCT can also precisely track the pubertal changes in bone size and shape that occur during adolescence.72 Performed on standard computed tomography scanners, QCT requires specific software algorithms that are not widely available, in part because of cost. The greatest drawback to QCT is its moderately high radiation dose. As a consequence, normative pediatric data are sparse, with their use reserved predominantly for research. Peripheral QCT, which only evaluates BMD of the extremities, uses much lower radiation doses than those associated with axial QCT but is hindered by the same factors.73

Ultrasound

Quantitative ultrasound is attractive in that it involves no radiation exposure, is portable, and potentially allows for inexpensive, office-based bone health screening.74 Unfortunately, not all quantitative ultrasound devices are appropriately sized for use in children and younger adolescents, and most devices do not have adequate normative pediatric databases.75 Furthermore, correlation with BMD as measured by DXA or QCT has been inconsistent. Further research is needed to determine if this technique captures intrinsic qualities of bone (eg, elasticity, trabecular separation) that are not detected by other modalities but still may affect fracture risk.76 - 77

Assessment of Bone Strength

One of the most clinically relevant properties of bone is its strength, which is dependent not only on bone mass, but size, geometry, and microarchitecture. Quantitative computed tomography is able to measure all of these parameters and is capable of generating numeric estimates of bone strength.78 Magnetic resonance imaging is also being investigated as a radiation-free modality to evaluate both bone geometry and quality,79 and there are mathematical models that use DXA data to estimate bone strength at the hip (ie, hip structural analysis).80

Measurement of Bone Turnover

Serum and urinary markers of bone turnover are sensitive to changes in bone formation and resorption. They are increasingly available for clinical use in reference laboratories, but normal growth and development during adolescence increase the variability in these measures such that their use should be restricted to monitoring treatment effects, not diagnosis.17 Common measures of calcium homeostasis such as serum calcium, magnesium, phosphorus, 25-hydroxyvitamin D, parathyroid hormone, and urinary spot calcium-creatinine ratio do not directly reflect bone turnover. They may be useful, however, when evaluating low BMD, but only to complement thorough medical, menstrual, and family histories; a complete review of systems; and a directed objective examination, including body mass index calculation and Tanner staging. Finally, bone biopsy to obtain computer-assisted histomorphometric information may rarely be requested by skeletal health specialists for particularly challenging cases.17

At the present time, no evidence-based clinical guidelines exist to help health care professionals determine when BMD screening is warranted, although a number of groups have published recommendations. The Cystic Fibrosis Foundation recently published an official position regarding bone health44 including an assessment and treatment protocol with baseline DXA scans obtained as young as 8 years. The British Paediatric and Adolescent Bone Group has also published guidelines for bone density screening and treatment in adolescents who they consider to be at risk, including those who have sustained recurrent fractures or a low-impact fracture, back pain, spinal deformity, loss of height, or a change in mobility or nutrition.73 The varied recommendations of these and other groups reflect the fundamental uncertainty over what constitutes a “fracture threshold” for children and adolescents at this time. Our clinical practice is to consider DXA scanning for an adolescent who has an underlying chronic condition that predisposes to a low BMD (Figure 2), with the presence of multiple risk factors or a strong family history of osteoporosis lowering our threshold for evaluation.

An example of the complexity of the decisions facing health care professionals regarding appropriate BMD screening practices is the debate stimulated by the recent Food and Drug Administration decision to issue a “black box” warning label on depot medroxyprogesterone acetate because of bone loss attributable to this agent.81 - 82 There is some evidence to suggest that adolescents regain bone density after discontinuing depot medroxyprogesterone acetate use,81 ,83 so the advantages of short-term use generally outweigh theoretical safety concerns regarding fracture risk in this population. However, the World Health Organization has stated that data are currently insufficient to determine if this also applies to long-term use of this agent, especially in adolescent girls.82 As with other at-risk adolescents, the decision to obtain a bone density measurement should be individualized, taking into account other potential risk factors for a low bone mass. More information will become available from continued research, both in depot medroxyprogesterone acetate users and other patient groups, to afford information regarding appropriate and evidence-based practice algorithms for this agent and other areas of pediatric bone health.

There are few skeletal agents (medications designed to augment BMD by either inhibiting bone resorption and/or increasing bone formation) available for potential use in adolescents. The unknown effects of some of these medications on a growing skeleton and the disappointing efficacy of others has hindered their use by pediatric professionals. Bisphosphonates are prescribed commonly to adults for postmenopausal and glucocorticoid-induced osteoporosis and offer a life-changing therapy for children with osteogenesis imperfecta84 - 87 and low bone mass and fractures secondary to cerebral palsy.88 With the exception of recent information on oral alendronate sodium,89 there is little experience with agents other than intravenous pamidronate for these diagnoses.84 - 88 Nonetheless, given the apparent positive tolerability of bisphosphonates in these populations, there is interest in expanding their use to indications for which efficacy is currently unknown. For example, alendronate sodium and risedronate sodium have been investigated in small studies of adolescents and young women with anorexia nervosa.90 - 91 Information is lacking on the long-term (>10 years) adverse effects of these agents, optimal duration of treatment, or appropriate maximal dose. Because it is known that bisphosphonates remain in the skeleton for several years, perhaps indefinitely, and that they cross the placenta, health care professionals should proceed with caution until more definitive safety and efficacy data are available.

The role of estrogen and/or progestin therapy in adolescent girls with anorexia nervosa or hypothalamic amenorrhea is yet another area of both controversy and active investigation.20 ,92 Several reports have documented no significant change in BMD in this group after estrogen therapy, often provided in the form of an oral contraceptive.21 ,93 - 94 Some subgroups of patients may be protected from bone loss with this therapy, especially young women with an extremely low body mass index (<70% of ideal body weight).93 The balance of data from several research studies suggests that the lack of efficacy of estrogen therapy in this population is because the observed bone loss may be attributable to other abnormalities beyond that of estrogen deficiency. Recent studies have explored the roles of insulin-like growth factor I,95 alone or in concert with an oral contraceptive,96 and androgen therapy (dehydroepiandrosterone21 and transdermal testosterone97 ).

Physical Activity

If physical activity is to be prescribed for bone mineral accrual, the questions to be answered include “how” and “when”? MacKelvie et al98 suggest that the benefits of exercise may be most pronounced in premenarchal girls experiencing their peak height velocity and boys in comparably early puberty, or ages 10 to 12 years in girls and 12 to 14 years in boys, on average. MacKelvie et al98 call for further research to clarify this “critical window” for bone accretion, as well as to determine whether benefits persist into adulthood. Another important area of inquiry in this field includes the interaction between physical activity and hormonal status, particularly the effect of estrogen status on bone mass in young women. Finally, the optimal types and duration of exercise have yet to be defined, leaving the American College of Sports Medicine, in its recent position stand on “Physical Activity and Bone Health,” unable to outline a prescription more detailed than high-intensity impact activities (such as running, jumping, gymnastics, or basketball) for 10 to 20 minutes, at least 3 days per week.13

Nutrition

The minimal amount of calcium that results in bone accretion is unclear, and the effect of calcium intake also varies by skeletal site, with cortical bone appearing to respond more significantly than trabecular bone.30 Recommendations for teenagers are further complicated by the fact that the skeletal effects of calcium may be dependent on the level of physical activity.99 However, the best available evidence was summarized by the National Academy of Sciences in 1997 to produce the dietary reference intake ranges (Table 2).34

Table Grahic Jump LocationTable 2. Recommended Dietary Intake of Calcium for Adolescents in the United States*

In 2003, the American Academy of Pediatrics adopted the National Academy of Sciences recommendation that all children from infancy to adolescence receive 200 IU of vitamin D supplementation daily, a policy that has been met with some controversy.29 This recommendation was reiterated in the recent position statement by the American Academy of Pediatrics on bone health.16 In addition, the appropriate supplementation requirement for certain adolescents who may be at higher risk for this deficiency (eg, African American adolescents, those residing in northern latitudes) is currently unknown but is likely significantly greater than the American Academy of Pediatrics recommendation. Provision of larger doses (eg, 800-1000 IU) may be needed for these groups, especially during winter. There is a critical need to reconvene an expert panel to evaluate the dietary reference intake for vitamin D for young patients.

Adolescence is the most critical period across the life span for bone health because more than half of PBM is accumulated during the teenage years. Recent and ongoing studies have highlighted the increasing number of clinical settings in which an adolescent may potentially lose bone density and are beginning to fill gaps in knowledge regarding the roles of physical activity and calcium and vitamin D intake in healthy adolescents, as well as the appropriate use of pharmacologic skeletal agents in those with chronic illness. Unfortunately, research has not yet generated evidence to identify appropriate candidates for both baseline bone density screening and continued monitoring. Nonetheless, although there still seem to be more questions than answers in this new field, adolescent health care professionals are on the cusp of an exciting era in which they can have a major role in improving the skeletal health of our nation.

Correspondence: Catherine M. Gordon, MD, MSc, Children's Hospital Bone Health Program, Children's Hospital Boston, 300 Longwood Ave, Boston, MA 02115 (catherine.gordon@childrens.harvard.edu).

Accepted for Publication: April 20, 2006.

Author Contributions:Study concept and design: Loud and Gordon. Drafting of the manuscript: Loud and Gordon. Critical revision of the manuscript for important intellectual content: Loud and Gordon. Administrative, technical, and material support: Loud. Study supervision: Gordon.

Funding/Support: This work was supported in part by National Institutes of Health grant RO1 HD 043869 and project 5 T71-MC-00009-14 00 from the Maternal and Child Health Bureau (Title V, Social Security Act), Health Resources and Services Administration, Department of Health and Human Services.

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Loucks  AB. Energy availability, not body fatness, regulates reproductive function in women Exerc Sport Sci Rev 2003;31144- 148
PubMed
Myburgh  KH, Hutchins  J, Fataar  AB, Hough  SF, Noakes  TD. Low bone density is an etiologic factor for stress fractures in athletes Ann Intern Med 1990;113754- 759
PubMed
Wasnich  R. Bone mass measurement: prediction of risk Am J Med 1993;956S- 10S
PubMed
Writing Group for the ISCD Position Development Conference,  Diagnosis of osteoporosis in men, premenopausal women, and children J Clin Densitom 2004;717- 26
PubMed
Bachrach  LK. Dual energy x-ray absorptiometry (DXA) measurements of bone density and body composition: promise and pitfalls J Pediatr Endocrinol Metab 2000;13983- 988
PubMed
Leonard  MB, Propert  KJ, Zemel  BS, Stallings  VA, Feldman  HI. Discrepancies in pediatric bone mineral density reference data: potential for misdiagnosis of osteopenia J Pediatr 1999;135182- 188
PubMed
Wang  J, Thornton  JC, Horlick  M, Formica  C, Wang  W, Pierson  RN  Jr. Dual x-ray absorptiometry in pediatric studies: changing scan modes alters bone and body composition measurements J Clin Densitom 1999;2135- 141
PubMed
Bachrach  LK, Hastie  T, Wang  MC, Narasimhan  B, Marcus  R. Bone mineral acquisition in healthy Asian, Hispanic, Black and Caucasian youth: a longitudinal study J Clin Endocrinol Metab 1999;844702- 4712
PubMed
Gilsanz  V. Bone density in children: a review of the available techniques and indications Eur J Radiol 1998;26177- 182
PubMed
Bachrach  LK. Osteoporosis and measurement of bone mass in children and adolescents Endocrinol Metab Clin North Am 2005;34521- 535
PubMed
Cole  JH, Scerpella  TA, van der Meulen  MCH. Fan-beam densitometry of the growing skeleton J Clin Densitom 2005;857- 64
PubMed
Koo  WWK, Hammami  M, Shypailo  RJ, Ellis  KJ. Bone and body composition measurements of small subjects: discrepancies from software for fan beam dual energy x-ray absorptiometry J Am Coll Nutr 2004;23647- 650
PubMed
Hammami  M, Koo  WWK, Hockman  EM. Technical considerations for fan-beam dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry body composition measurements in pediatric studies JPEN J Parenter Enteral Nutr 2004;28328- 333
PubMed
Pocock  NA, Noakes  KA, Majerovic  Y, Griffiths  MR. Magnification error of femoral geometry using fan beam densitometers Calcif Tissue Int 1997;608- 10
PubMed
Carter  DR, Bouxsein  ML, Marcus  R. New approaches for interpreting projected bone densitometry data J Bone Miner Res 1992;7137- 145
PubMed
Kroger  H, Kotaniemi  A, Vainio  P, Alhava  E. Bone densitometry of the spine and femur in children by dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry Bone Miner 1992;1775- 85
PubMed
Molgaard  C, Thomsen  BL, Prentie  A, Cole  TJ, Michaelsen  KF. Whole body bone mineral content in healthy children and adolescents Arch Dis Child 1997;769- 15
PubMed
Horlick  M, Wang  J, Pierson  RN  Jr, Thornton  JC. Prediction models for evaluation of total-body bone mass with dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry among children and adolescents Pediatrics 2004;114e337- e345http://pediatrics.aappublications.org/cgi/content/full/114/3/e337Accessed March 12, 2006
PubMed
Genant  HK, Engelke  K, Fuerst  T.  et al.  Noninvasive assessment of bone mineral and structure: state of the art J Bone Miner Res 1996;11707- 2730
PubMed
Mora  S, Gilsanz  V. Establishment of peak bone mass Endocrinol Metab Clin North Am 2003;3239- 63
PubMed
Specker  BL, Schoenau  E. Quantitative bone analysis in children: current methods and recommendations J Pediatr 2005;146726- 731
PubMed
Malavolta  N, Mule  R, Frigato  M. Quantitative ultrasound assessment of bone Aging Clin Exp Res 2004;1623- 28
PubMed
Fricke  O, Tutlewski  B, Schwahn  B, Schoenau  E. Speed of sound: relation to geometric characteristics of bone in children, adolescents, and adults J Pediatr 2005;146764- 768
PubMed
Hartman  C, Shamir  R, Eshach-Adiv  O, Iosilevsky  G, Brik  R. Assessment of osteoporosis by quantitative ultrasound versus dual energy x-ray absorptiometry in children with chronic rheumatic diseases J Rheumatol 2004;31981- 985
PubMed
Hartman  C, Hino  B, Lerner  A.  et al.  Bone quantitative ultrasound and bone mineral density in children with celiac disease J Pediatr Gastroenterol Nutr 2004;39504- 510
PubMed
Schiessl  H, Ferretti  JL, Tysarczyk-Niemeyer  G, Schonau  E.ed  et al.  Non-invasive bone strength index as analyzed by peripheral quantitative computed tomography (pQCT) Paediatric Osteology: New Developments in Diagnostics and Therapy. Amsterdam, the Netherlands Elsevier1996;141- 146
McKay  HA, Sievanen  H, Petit  MA.  et al.  Application of magnetic resonance imaging to evaluation of femoral neck structure in growing girls J Clin Densitom 2004;7161- 168
PubMed
Beck  TJ, Ruff  CB, Warden  KE.  et al.  Predicting femoral neck strength from bone mineral data: a structural approach Invest Radiol 1990;256- 18
PubMed
Kaunitz  AM. Depo-Provera's black box: time to reconsider? Contraception 2005;72165- 167
PubMed
WHO,  WHO statement on hormonal contraception and bone health Wkly Epidemiol Rec 2005;80302- 304
PubMed
Scholes  D, LaCroix  AZ, Ichikawa  LE, Barlow  WE, Ott  SM. Change in bone mineral density among adolescent women using and discontinuing depot medroxyprogesterone acetate contraception Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med 2005;159139- 144
PubMed
Glorieux  FH, Bishop  NJ, Plotkin  H, Chabot  G, Lanoue  G, Travers  R. Cyclic administration of pamidronate in children with severe osteogenesis imperfecta N Engl J Med 1998;339947- 952
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Rauch  F, Plotkin  H, Travers  R, Zeitlin  L, Glorieux  FH. Osteogenesis imperfecta types I, III, and IV: effect of pamidronate therapy on bone and mineral metabolism J Clin Endocrinol Metab 2003;88986- 992
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Rauch  F, Plotkin  H, Zeitlin  L, Glorieux  FH. Bone mass, size, and density in children and adolescents with osteogenesis imperfecta: effect of intravenous pamidronate therapy J Bone Miner Res 2003;18610- 614
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Henderson  RC, Lark  RK, Keskemethy  HH, Miller  F, Harcke  HT, Bachrach  J. Bisphosphonates to treat osteopenia in children with quadriplegic cerebral palsy: a randomized placebo-controlled clinical trial J Pediatr 2002;141644- 651
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Ward  LM, Denker  AE, Porras  A.  et al.  Single-dose pharmacokinetics and tolerability of alendronate 35- and 70-milligram tablets in children and adolescents with osteogenesis imperfecta type I J Clin Endocrinol Metab 2005;904051- 4056
PubMed
Miller  KK, Grieco  KA, Mulder  J.  et al.  Effects of risedronate on bone density in anorexia nervosa J Clin Endocrinol Metab 2004;893903- 3906
PubMed
Golden  NH, Iglesias  EA, Jacobson  MS.  et al.  Alendronate for the treatment of osteopenia in anorexia nervosa: a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial J Clin Endocrinol Metab 2005;903179- 3185
PubMed
Liu  SL, Lebrun  CM. Effect of oral contraceptives and hormone replacement therapy on bone mineral density in premenopausal and perimenopausal women: a systematic review Br J Sports Med 2006;4011- 24
PubMed
Klibanski  A, Biller  BMK, Schoenfeld  DA, Herzog  DB, Saxe  VC. The effects of estrogen administration on trabecular bone in young women with anorexia nervosa J Clin Endocrinol Metab 1995;80898- 904
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Golden  NH, Lanzkowsky  L, Schebendach  J, Palestro  CJ, Jacobson  MS, Shekner  IR. The effect of estrogen-progestin treatment on bone mineral density in anorexia nervosa J Pediatr Adolesc Gynecol 2002;15135- 143
PubMed
Grinspoon  S, Baum  H, Lee  K, Anderson  E, Herzog  D, Klibanski  A. Effects of short-term recombinant human insulin-like growth factor I administration on bone turnover in osteopenic women with anorexia nervosa J Clin Endocrinol Metab 1996;813864- 3870
PubMed
Grinspoon  S, Thomas  L, Miller  K, Herzog  D, Klibanski  A. Effects of recombinant human IGF-I and oral contraceptive administration on bone density in anorexia nervosa J Clin Endocrinol Metab 2002;872883- 2891
PubMed
Miller  KK, Grieco  KA, Klibanski  A. Testosterone administration in women with anorexia nervosa J Clin Endocrinol Metab 2005;901428- 1433
PubMed
MacKelvie  KJ, Khan  KM, McKay  HA. Is there a critical period for bone response to weight-bearing exercise in children and adolescents? a systematic review Br J Sports Med 2002;36250- 257
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Specker  B, Binkley  T. Randomized trial of physical activity and calcium supplementation on bone mineral content in 3- to 5-year-old children J Bone Miner Res 2003;18885- 892
PubMed

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Figures

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Figure 1.

Factors affecting bone health. Reprinted with permission.9

Grahic Jump Location
Place holder to copy figure label and caption
Figure 2.

Clinical settings that potentially confer skeletal “risk” to adolescents. *Indicates that an official position statement has been published (cystic fibrosis44 ; female athlete triad45 ).

Grahic Jump Location

Tables

Table Grahic Jump LocationTable 1. Guidance on Dual-Energy X-ray Absorptiometry Interpretation in Children and Adolescents Younger Than 20 Years*
Table Grahic Jump LocationTable 2. Recommended Dietary Intake of Calcium for Adolescents in the United States*

Interactive Graphics

Video

Country-Specific Mortality and Growth Failure in Infancy and Yound Children and Association With Material Stature

Use interactive graphics and maps to view and sort country-specific infant and early dhildhood mortality and growth failure data and their association with maternal

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Steelman  J, Zeitler  P. Osteoporosis in pediatrics Pediatr Rev 2001;2256- 64
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Teramoto  S, Matsuse  T, Ouchi  Y. Increased production of TNF-α may play a role in osteoporosis in cystic fibrosis patients Chest 1997;112574
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Schulte  C, Dignass  AU, Mann  K, Goeball  H. Reduced bone mineral density and unbalanced bone metabolism in patients with inflammatory bowel disease Inflamm Bowel Dis 1998;4268- 275
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Mansfield  MJ, Emans  SJ. Anorexia nervosa, athletics, and amenorrhea Pediatr Clin North Am 1989;36533- 549
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Drinkwater  BL, Breumner  B, Chestnut  CH. Menstrual history as a determinant of current bone density in young athletes JAMA 1990;263545- 548
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Khan  KM, Liu-Ambrose  T, Sran  MM.  et al.  New criteria for female athlete triad syndrome? Br J Sports Med 2002;3610- 13
PubMed
Loucks  AB. Energy availability, not body fatness, regulates reproductive function in women Exerc Sport Sci Rev 2003;31144- 148
PubMed
Myburgh  KH, Hutchins  J, Fataar  AB, Hough  SF, Noakes  TD. Low bone density is an etiologic factor for stress fractures in athletes Ann Intern Med 1990;113754- 759
PubMed
Wasnich  R. Bone mass measurement: prediction of risk Am J Med 1993;956S- 10S
PubMed
Writing Group for the ISCD Position Development Conference,  Diagnosis of osteoporosis in men, premenopausal women, and children J Clin Densitom 2004;717- 26
PubMed
Bachrach  LK. Dual energy x-ray absorptiometry (DXA) measurements of bone density and body composition: promise and pitfalls J Pediatr Endocrinol Metab 2000;13983- 988
PubMed
Leonard  MB, Propert  KJ, Zemel  BS, Stallings  VA, Feldman  HI. Discrepancies in pediatric bone mineral density reference data: potential for misdiagnosis of osteopenia J Pediatr 1999;135182- 188
PubMed
Wang  J, Thornton  JC, Horlick  M, Formica  C, Wang  W, Pierson  RN  Jr. Dual x-ray absorptiometry in pediatric studies: changing scan modes alters bone and body composition measurements J Clin Densitom 1999;2135- 141
PubMed
Bachrach  LK, Hastie  T, Wang  MC, Narasimhan  B, Marcus  R. Bone mineral acquisition in healthy Asian, Hispanic, Black and Caucasian youth: a longitudinal study J Clin Endocrinol Metab 1999;844702- 4712
PubMed
Gilsanz  V. Bone density in children: a review of the available techniques and indications Eur J Radiol 1998;26177- 182
PubMed
Bachrach  LK. Osteoporosis and measurement of bone mass in children and adolescents Endocrinol Metab Clin North Am 2005;34521- 535
PubMed
Cole  JH, Scerpella  TA, van der Meulen  MCH. Fan-beam densitometry of the growing skeleton J Clin Densitom 2005;857- 64
PubMed
Koo  WWK, Hammami  M, Shypailo  RJ, Ellis  KJ. Bone and body composition measurements of small subjects: discrepancies from software for fan beam dual energy x-ray absorptiometry J Am Coll Nutr 2004;23647- 650
PubMed
Hammami  M, Koo  WWK, Hockman  EM. Technical considerations for fan-beam dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry body composition measurements in pediatric studies JPEN J Parenter Enteral Nutr 2004;28328- 333
PubMed
Pocock  NA, Noakes  KA, Majerovic  Y, Griffiths  MR. Magnification error of femoral geometry using fan beam densitometers Calcif Tissue Int 1997;608- 10
PubMed
Carter  DR, Bouxsein  ML, Marcus  R. New approaches for interpreting projected bone densitometry data J Bone Miner Res 1992;7137- 145
PubMed
Kroger  H, Kotaniemi  A, Vainio  P, Alhava  E. Bone densitometry of the spine and femur in children by dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry Bone Miner 1992;1775- 85
PubMed
Molgaard  C, Thomsen  BL, Prentie  A, Cole  TJ, Michaelsen  KF. Whole body bone mineral content in healthy children and adolescents Arch Dis Child 1997;769- 15
PubMed
Horlick  M, Wang  J, Pierson  RN  Jr, Thornton  JC. Prediction models for evaluation of total-body bone mass with dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry among children and adolescents Pediatrics 2004;114e337- e345http://pediatrics.aappublications.org/cgi/content/full/114/3/e337Accessed March 12, 2006
PubMed
Genant  HK, Engelke  K, Fuerst  T.  et al.  Noninvasive assessment of bone mineral and structure: state of the art J Bone Miner Res 1996;11707- 2730
PubMed
Mora  S, Gilsanz  V. Establishment of peak bone mass Endocrinol Metab Clin North Am 2003;3239- 63
PubMed
Specker  BL, Schoenau  E. Quantitative bone analysis in children: current methods and recommendations J Pediatr 2005;146726- 731
PubMed
Malavolta  N, Mule  R, Frigato  M. Quantitative ultrasound assessment of bone Aging Clin Exp Res 2004;1623- 28
PubMed
Fricke  O, Tutlewski  B, Schwahn  B, Schoenau  E. Speed of sound: relation to geometric characteristics of bone in children, adolescents, and adults J Pediatr 2005;146764- 768
PubMed
Hartman  C, Shamir  R, Eshach-Adiv  O, Iosilevsky  G, Brik  R. Assessment of osteoporosis by quantitative ultrasound versus dual energy x-ray absorptiometry in children with chronic rheumatic diseases J Rheumatol 2004;31981- 985
PubMed
Hartman  C, Hino  B, Lerner  A.  et al.  Bone quantitative ultrasound and bone mineral density in children with celiac disease J Pediatr Gastroenterol Nutr 2004;39504- 510
PubMed
Schiessl  H, Ferretti  JL, Tysarczyk-Niemeyer  G, Schonau  E.ed  et al.  Non-invasive bone strength index as analyzed by peripheral quantitative computed tomography (pQCT) Paediatric Osteology: New Developments in Diagnostics and Therapy. Amsterdam, the Netherlands Elsevier1996;141- 146
McKay  HA, Sievanen  H, Petit  MA.  et al.  Application of magnetic resonance imaging to evaluation of femoral neck structure in growing girls J Clin Densitom 2004;7161- 168
PubMed
Beck  TJ, Ruff  CB, Warden  KE.  et al.  Predicting femoral neck strength from bone mineral data: a structural approach Invest Radiol 1990;256- 18
PubMed
Kaunitz  AM. Depo-Provera's black box: time to reconsider? Contraception 2005;72165- 167
PubMed
WHO,  WHO statement on hormonal contraception and bone health Wkly Epidemiol Rec 2005;80302- 304
PubMed
Scholes  D, LaCroix  AZ, Ichikawa  LE, Barlow  WE, Ott  SM. Change in bone mineral density among adolescent women using and discontinuing depot medroxyprogesterone acetate contraception Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med 2005;159139- 144
PubMed
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To understand the clinical management of acute heart failure syndromes.
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